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Bath Lift Product

Overview

A bath lift is a motorized device that safely lowers and raises an elderly or disabled patient into and out of a bathtub, eliminating the risk of falls during bathing. The device uses waterproof linear actuators, suction feet for tub adhesion, and a sealed control pendant to provide patient independence and dignity during personal hygiene. Unlike walk-in tubs (which require home modification), a bath lift retrofits into existing standard bathtubs in seconds.

Bath lifts are essential for patients with arthritis, spinal cord injury, post-operative mobility restrictions, or advanced age who cannot independently lower into or rise from a tub without assistance. They reduce caregiver back strain and injuries while enabling patients to enjoy warm-water bathing therapy without risk.

How it works

Before use, the operator positions four [[bath-lift-suction-cup|suction feet]] against the interior walls of the filled bathtub, pressing each firmly until it creates a vacuum seal. The Foot Base of the frame now adheres to the tub; the patient sits on the Seat Pan while holding the [[bath-lift-safety-rails|grab rails]]. The operator or patient presses the down button on the Control Module, activating the Motor.

The motor drives the Pump, which pressurizes hydraulic fluid or drives the Linear Actuators electrically. The two [[bath-lift-linkage-bars|linkage bars]] form a four-bar pantograph mechanism that converts the linear actuator stroke into smooth vertical motion. As the actuators extend, the seat descends into the bathwater, lowering the patient at a controlled rate (typically 30–60 seconds for full lowering). The Position Sensor tracks seat height.

Once submerged to the desired depth (typically 150–400 mm below the tub rim), the patient relaxes and bathes. To exit, the operator presses the raise button. The actuators retract, and the linkage lifts the patient back up and out of the tub. An integrated Pressure Relief Valve valve prevents over-pressurization, protecting seals.

Waterproofing and electrical safety

All components in contact with bathwater are stainless steel (304L or 316L) or epoxy-coated to prevent corrosion and electrolysis. The Control PCB is potted in waterproof epoxy or housed in a sealed enclosure rated IP67 (protection against water immersion to 1 meter). The power cord includes a ground-fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) to cut power instantly if moisture bridges the AC supply.

The [[bath-lift-pump|pump]] and motor are mounted above the tub, fed by hoses with waterproof quick-disconnect [[connector|couplings]] that can be uncoupled for drain-down during storage or cleaning. The Fluid Tank (in hydraulic systems) sits on the floor or wall bracket, remote from water splash.

Suction mechanism and installation

The four [[bath-lift-suction-cup|suction cups]] (75–100 mm diameter) adhere to the wet porcelain of the bathtub through surface tension and vacuum. Each foot is rated to hold ≥5 kg per cup, providing a minimum 20 kg total grip. The suction cups release instantly when the user presses a manual release lever or steps off, allowing quick removal. This design requires no permanent tub modification—critical for rental housing or facilities with multiple tub styles.

Proper suction requires:

  • Clean tub surface free of soap residue and algae.
  • Wet porcelain or ceramic (hydrophobic surfaces like fiberglass require rubbing alcohol to improve adhesion).
  • Even pressure on all four feet to establish simultaneous seals.

Poor suction is the most common field complaint, typically solved by cleaning the cup lips and tub surface.

Mechanical advantage and comfort

The [[bath-lift-linkage-bars|four-bar linkage]] provides a mechanical advantage, allowing a small actuator stroke to produce large vertical displacement. A typical design lowers the patient 350–400 mm with actuators extending only 100–150 mm. This compact design fits into narrow bathtubs without protruding excessively.

The [[bath-lift-seat-pan|molded seat]] is contoured for lumbar support and includes a [[bath-lift-drainage-grate|drainage grate]] to prevent standing water pooling in the seat during use. The [[bath-lift-armrest-pair|padded armrests]] give elderly patients grip points to stabilize during the descent, reducing fear and disorientation in the water.

Maintenance and troubleshooting

Hydraulic systems (if used) require annual fluid top-up and inspection of hose couplings for weeping. The Pressure Relief Valve valve should be tested to confirm it opens at or below 150 bar. Electric linear actuators have sealed rod seals; if leaking, the entire actuator must be replaced.

Motor bearings wear over time; noisy operation or grinding sounds indicate imminent bearing failure. Suction cup degradation—hardening or cracking of the rubber lip—reduces grip and requires replacement. Most bath lifts operate 15–20 years with preventive maintenance.

Build & assembly graph

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Bill of materials

7 top-level lines · 33 rows shown · 111 parts total · indented to 3 levels
# Item / sub-assembly Part no. Qty/assy Ext. qty Parts Type
1 Frame Assembly 4 parts bath-lift-frame-assembly 1 12 assembly
1.1 Main Frame Tube bath-lift-main-frame 1 part
1.2 Side Brackets bath-lift-side-brackets 2 part
1.3 Foot Base bath-lift-foot-base 1 part
1.4 Fastener Set fastener-set 8 part
2 Seat and Backrest 4 parts bath-lift-seat-backrest 1 5 assembly
2.1 Seat Pan bath-lift-seat-pan 1 part
2.2 Backrest Pad bath-lift-backrest-pad 1 part
2.3 Armrest Pair bath-lift-armrest-pair 2 part
2.4 Drainage Grate bath-lift-drainage-grate 1 part
3 Actuator System 4 parts bath-lift-actuator-system 1 9 assembly
3.1 Linear Actuators bath-lift-actuator-pair 2 part
3.2 Linkage Bars bath-lift-linkage-bars 4 part
3.3 Position Sensor bath-lift-position-sensor 1 part
3.4 Connector connector 2 part
4 Suction Feet 3 parts bath-lift-foot-pads 4 12 assembly
4.1 Suction Cup bath-lift-suction-cup 16 part
4.2 Foot Adapter bath-lift-foot-adapter 16 part
4.3 Fastener Set fastener-set 16 part
5 Control Module 4 parts bath-lift-control-module 1 5 assembly
5.1 Control Housing bath-lift-control-housing 1 part
5.2 Control Buttons bath-lift-control-buttons 2 part
5.3 Control PCB bath-lift-control-pcb 1 part
5.4 Connector connector 1 part
6 Pump Motor Unit 4 parts bath-lift-pump-motor 1 4 assembly
6.1 Motor bath-lift-motor 1 part
6.2 Pump bath-lift-pump 1 part
6.3 Pressure Relief Valve bath-lift-pressure-relief 1 part
6.4 Fluid Tank bath-lift-fluid-tank 1 part
7 Safety Rails 3 parts bath-lift-safety-rails 2 14 assembly
7.1 Rail Tube bath-lift-rail-tube 4 part
7.2 Rail Bracket bath-lift-rail-mounting 8 part
7.3 Fastener Set fastener-set 16 part

Sourcing — likely vendors

Companies that make this · indicative price $500–$3M · MOQ & lead are typical
VendorHQSpecialtyMOQLead time
gehealthcare.com ↗ Chicago, US Medical imaging & devices 100 units 12–20 wks
siemens-healthineers.com ↗ Erlangen, DE Medical systems 100 units 12–20 wks
🇳🇱Philips
philips.com ↗
Amsterdam, NL Health technology 100 units 12–20 wks
🇺🇸Medtronic
medtronic.com ↗
Minneapolis, US Medical devices 100 units 12–20 wks
🇨🇳Mindray
mindray.com ↗
Shenzhen, CN Medical devices 100 units 12–20 wks

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